NASHVILLE, Tenn.– Grammy-winning country artists Tim McGraw and Faith Hill will be featured in the exhibition, “Tim McGraw & Faith Hill: Mississippi Woman, Louisiana Man” opening Nov. 17 at the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum.

The exhibit will chronicle the parallel singing careers that started in adjacent Southern states and merged – as spouses and performing partners—in Nashville. Among the many artifacts in the exhibit will be the mirror from McGraw’s dressing room, upon which he proposed to Hill, and she accepted.

The exhibition will incorporate a wide array of memorabilia representing milestones and significant moments in the couple’s lives, from Hill’s Mississippi upbringing and singing in church, to McGraw’s youthful promise as a baseball player, and, later, their high-profile lives as entertainers with dozens of top hits and a slew of industry awards between them. The couple, whose individual careers have celebrated multi-platinum records, sold-out tours, No. 1 hits and multiple Grammy, ACM and CMA Awards, have also built their Soul2Soul tour franchise together, one of the most successful running tours in the history of country music.

A few highlights of the exhibition include:

• Playskool airplane-shaped desk used by Hill as a child.

• Ivory-colored Heidi Weisel gown with short train, worn by Hill at her wedding to McGraw in 1996.

• Mirror from McGraw’s dressing room, on which Hill answered his marriage proposal, using a felt pen to write, “I am gonna be your wife! Yes. Love you so, so much.”

• Outfits worn by Hill and McGraw in the 2017 music video for “The Rest of Our Life,” including:

• Black leather Neolite cowboy boots worn by Hill in the 1993 music video for "Wild One," her first No. 1 single.

• Leather jacket worn by McGraw in the 1994 music video for “Indian Outlaw.”

• Grammy presented to Hill for Best Country Album (2000), for Breathe.

• Grammy presented to Hill and McGraw for Best Country Collaboration with Vocals (2000), for “Let’s Make Love.”

• ACM award presented to McGraw and Hill for Song of the Year (1997), for “It’s Your Love.”

• Grammy presented to McGraw for Best Male Country Vocal Performance (2004), for “Live Like You Were Dying.”

With an unduplicated collection of more than 2.5 million artifacts, the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum celebrates its 50th anniversary in 2017. The exhibit on McGraw and Hill joins 2017 exhibits on Jason Aldean, Shania Twain, Loretta Lynn and Lynn Anderson.